- 1886 - SS Roy “Slippery/Whitey” Ellam was born in West Conshohocken, Pennsylvania. Roy first got a shot in the show in 1909 with the Reds as a 23-year-old; he had to wait until 1918 to get a second look with the Pirates. He got a fair audition (the Pirates had swung a deal with Indianapolis of the American Association for him) with 101 ABs, but he had more walks (17) than hits (10) and batted just .130. Ellam returned to his long-time base of operations, the Southern Association, and played out his 19-year pro career as an infielder and player-manager, retiring in 1930 to become a hometown contractor.
Cookie Cuccurullo - 1943 Press photo |
- 1918 - LHP Arthur “Cookie” Cuccurullo was born in Asbury Park, New Jersey. He was called up in 1943 after posting a 20-win season for the Eastern League Albany Senators. Cookie spent his three-year MLB career as a Pirate with a line of 3-5-5/4.55 in 62 games, nine of which were starts. Cuccurullo was one of many ballplayers who filled in during the war years and returned to the minors afterward when players returned from the service; 1945 was his final MLB campaign.
- 1922 - 2B Romanus “Monty” Basgall was born in Pfeifer, Kansas. Monty started with Dodgers, went off to the Army Air Corps and was signed by the Bucs upon his return from the service. He was a yo-yo player for the Bucs from 1948-51, hitting just .215 as he went back and forth from the minors to the show. He was in the Pirate system until 1958, ending his pro career as a player/manager at Waco, Beaumont and Lincoln. He went on to become a scout and coach for the Dodgers. His nickname came from his middle name of Montgomery.
- 1934 - The Pirates were looking for infield help, per the Pittsburgh Press’ beat guy Volney Walsh, and Brooklyn had what they wanted, but the Dodgers' insistence on LHP Larry French squelched the deal. And no wonder; the lefty posted a 51-42-6/3.00 slash from 1931-33 and was in the early stages of an 11-year double-digit wins string. But he wasn’t untouchable; after winning just 12 games with a 3.58 ERA in ‘34, the Bucs shipped the southpaw, along with Freddie Lindstrom, to the Chicago Cubs for Guy Bush, Babe Herman and Jim Weaver. Bush and Weaver together won 48 games in three years (Guy lasted for two campaigns and Jim three) as Pirates; French took 51 scalps in the same span for the Cubs and won 95 times in his seven years as a Baby Bruin.
- 1943 - 1B/OF Bob Oliver was born in Shreveport, Louisiana. The Bucs signed him out of American River College in 1963 and he got a brief (0-for-2 in three games) September call-up in ‘65. Pittsburgh shipped him to the Twins after the 1967 campaign for Ronnie Kline to launch Bob on a seven-year run in the Junior Circuit beginning in 1969. Oliver now works as a baseball instructor at his academy and others. His son Darren followed his footsteps to the show, pitching for 20 MLB seasons and now a Ranger exec.
Bob Oliver - 1968 Topps |
- 1959 - Manager Danny Murtaugh and GM Joe Brown were honored at the annual Dapper Dan dinner. Murtaugh was the top awardee, recognized for publicizing Pittsburgh sports (he beat out the Steelers’ QB Bobby Layne) and Brown was recognized for his contributions to Pittsburgh sports while Bob Friend, Bill Mazeroski (who missed due to his dad’s death), Roy Face and Frank Thomas were also given awards for outstanding performances in 1958. In a sidebar to the main event, old Bucco hurler Wilbur Cooper was inducted into the Pittsburgh Sports Hall of Fame, with former teammate Pie Traynor being his presenter.
- 1965 - RHP Ray “The Frenchman” Kremer passed away at the age of 71 in Pinole, California, from heart problems. Ray spent his entire 10-year career as a Pirate, starting out as a 31-year-old rookie in 1924. A bout of rheumatism during a tryout with the Giants in 1916 seems to have erased him from the MLB radar. He went on to toss 2,100+ innings and post 100+ wins in the Pacific Coast League in the late 1910s and early 1920s, and the Bucs wisely gave him a second shot after a 357 IP, 25-16/3.08 Oakland campaign by purchasing his contract from the Oaks. He made up quickly for lost time; he won double-digit games with 200+ innings for eight straight seasons, ending his big league days in 1933 at age 40 with a line of 143-85-9/3.76. Kremer twice won 20 games and led the NL in ERA in both 1926 and 1927. He retired back to his hometown in California and became a mailman.
- 1972 - C Josh Gibson and 1B Walter “Buck” Leonard were selected to become members of the Hall of Fame by the Special Committee on the Negro Leagues. Gibson, the “Black Babe Ruth,” played for the Homestead Grays and Pittsburgh Crawfords. His statue is at Nationals Park, where the Grays often played, and Ammon Field in the Hill District was renamed to honor him. The Grays’ Leonard batted behind him and became known as the “Black Lou Gehrig.” The “Thunder Twins” were inducted on August 7th.
Felix Pie - 2013 photo Jason Watson/Getty |
- 1985 - OF Felix Pie was born in La Romana, Dominican Republic. After starting out with the Cubs, Pie had back-to-back solid campaigns for the Orioles in 2009-10 but fell victim to a ruptured back. The Bucs signed him as a depth player in 2013. He was called up in late August and fizzled, batting .138, then took his game to Korea the following season; since 2016, he’s played in a variety of Latin leagues.
- 1988 - RHP Bob Walk avoided arb and signed a one-year/$450K deal. Walkie had put together a line of 8-2/3.31 in 1987 and settled between his asking price of $497,500 and the Bucco offer of $375,000.
- 1990 - Bobby Bonilla, in his second year of arbitration, became the first Pirate to take his case to an arb hearing since 1983. Bonilla took it on the chin and had to settle for $1.25M after seeking $1.7M; he pulled down $730 K during the season. The arbitrator found his four-year stat line to be middling in a comparison with 14 other players who had similar service/playing time. But Bo would end up OK financially; he’d get $2.4M in 1991 and then spent the next eight years knocking down between $5.1-$6.3M per campaign.
- 2007 - Pirates Charities completed its first project when the East Liberty Boys & Girls Club opened the Pirates Community Baseball Center, a redo of some old, unused space in the building that was converted to a baseball/softball training facility. The project cost $300K, with PC putting up $165,000 and the Roberto Clemente Foundation $65,000. The Pirates had donated to various charities under previous ownership, but Bob Nutting was the first to fold community action into the formal Bucco structure.
Frankie Liriano - 2013 Topps Chrome |
- 2013 - LHP Francisco Liriano was signed as a free agent. The Cisco Kid had agreed to a two-year contract worth $12.75M on December 12th, 2012, but broke his arm before the physical, voiding the deal. A new two-year agreement was reached with lots of incentives based on starts that would allow him to reach the original contract figures. Frankie came back May 11th, finishing 16-8 with a 3.02 ERA and was the NL Comeback Player of the Year. He followed that with a 7-10 slate in 2014 with a 3.38 ERA, netting a three-year contract during the off season. Frankie was shipped to Toronto at the 2016 deadline for Drew Hutchison, who was DFA’ed at the end of the 2017 campaign. Hutch spent 2019 in the minors, working for three orgs while the Cisco Kid tossed for the Bucs and then signed in the off season w/Philly. He retired in 2022.
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